Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation-funded group trying to bury video of twisted interviews with little kids about sex and masturbation: 'Do you play with your ****?'



A Dutch organization funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is facing scrutiny over one of its videos featuring children as young as four being asked wildly inappropriate questions about sex and masturbation.

While the Rutgers Foundation is desperately trying to deep-six the video, the right-wing Dutch populist party Forum voor Democratie has drawn attention to its contents in an effort to expose what the group is really up to, reported Reduxx.

Rutgers, like Planned Parenthood in the U.S., claims to be in the business of educating and supporting young people in sexual matters but also advocates for gender ideology and abortion appreciation in schools with the help of other activist groups.

The group states on its website, "We want young people to be free to enjoy their sexuality and relationships, while respecting the rights of others in an inclusive society," admitting to advocating "for progressive language and norm-setting on sexuality education."

Rutgers kicked off an initiative targeting children on March 20 called "What do I like?" as part of a national "Spring Jitters Week" campaign to expand sexual education in primary schools.

"Learning about your body, talking about what you like and a positive self-image. This is the focus this year during the Week of Spring Jitters, an annual project week about relationships, sexuality and resilience in special and primary education," Rutgers wrote on its project page. "We want to make children think about what they like and teach them to express their wishes."

"When children in primary education learn about their bodies, relationships and sexuality from a positive message, they know better what they like and what they don't like," said Elsbeth Reitzema, a so-called sex education expert at Rutgers.

Atlantic staff writer Olga Khazan cited Reitzema and her work with Rutgers in an article last year in an effort to stand up her argument that contrary to the claims of conservatives, parental groups, and Republicans, talking to kids about graphic sex acts wasn't a matter of "grooming them to be abused by pedophiles."

Rutgers, along with Khazan's model sex-educator, went into Dutch elementary schools again this spring to provide children with an understanding of sexuality and sex acts from an early age so that they can be "better able to communicate ... their wishes and limits and learn to treat each other more respectfully."

According to Rutgers, "When children of primary school age reach out about sexuality, the conversations most often revolve around making love, fingering and jerking off, the first time, masturbation and kissing."

The teacher-facing page for the initiative contains various videos to show kids, including "giving permission for children" and "first times - cumming."

The specific video that piqued the interest of Dutch anti-groomer groups was entitled "Wat vind ik fijn," or "What do I like?"

Reduxx reported that the video features children as young as four being asked about their sexual proclivities.

In one scene, a 6-year-old boy named Loek appears alongside his gay guardians, one of whom asks, "Do you like it when someone is petting you?"

The boy shakes his head no, then the adult male asks, "And what about being tickled?"

After the boy answers in the affirmative, the man says, "Oh, we'll have to do that every night then before you sleep."

In another scene, a woman talks to a 9-year-old girl about ejaculation and the "nice feeling" she can attain via orgasm. The adult then describes the various parts of female genitalia to the little girl, emphasizing that she will get a "very nice feeling" from rubbing her "little button."

"You can rub it with your finger," stressed the woman.

A 4-year-old boy is pressed about his masturbation routine in another scene.

His alleged mother, asks him, "What about you? Do you ever play with your dick? Do you ever touch your willie?" ... How does that feel? And when do you do that?"

Despite the boy's confusion, the mother lays in with additional questions: "Do you do that when we're eating? ... Why don't you do that in class?"

Another little boy is told in the video to refer to sex as "f***ing or sucking."

\u201cA Dutch youth sexuality charity is under fire for releasing a video showing adults discussing sex and masturbation with young children. \n\nThe Rutgers Foundation has deleted the video and is threatening legal action against those who re-upload it.\n\nREAD: https://t.co/5jKJipuyvy\u201d
— REDUXX (@REDUXX) 1686236044

The video was reportedly taken down just 24 hours after it appeared on Twitter. Rutgers claimed it had removed the video because it had been taken "out of context."

"Unfortunately, there is quite a bit of fake news and misinformation ... going around at the moment," tweeted Rutgers. "We have also just taken a video offline, in which parents are talking to their child. The topics covered in the video are: learning about your body, talking about what you like and setting boundaries."

"We find that the video is being taken out of context by some people online and used to spread misinformation," wrote the organization, citing protection of the children involved as cause.

The right-wing populist part FVD spoke out against both Rutgers' initiative and its video in late March, calling the "sexualization and indoctrination" of children "disgusting."

\u201cJaarlijks ontvangt de Rutgers Stichting miljoenensubsidies voor de 'Week van de Lentekriebels'. Wat gebeurt er met al dat belastinggeld?\n\nOp basisscholen krijgen kinderen vanaf 4 (!) jaar deze hele week te maken met seksualisering en indoctrinatie. Walgelijk. #FVD #lentekriebels\u2026\u201d
— Forum voor Democratie (@Forum voor Democratie) 1679409114

Recognizing that Rutgers' deleted video was revelatory of the group's alleged sexualization of young children, FVD reposted the video to its own YouTube channel with the title, "Deleted video. Shocking sexualization of young children."

According to the Dutch publication Algemeen Dagblad, an FVD spokesman suggested in a voice-over at the end of the video that it was "obvious Rutgers feels caught" and is doing everything it can "to cover [its] dirty tracks," adding that it was matter of public interest to disclose what elementary-school children were being subjected to.

Rutgers reportedly attempted to get the video taken off YouTube, stating, "The parents and children have not given Forum permission to publish the images."

Reduxx reported the sex group is now threatening to sue the FVD unless the video is taken down. At the time of publication, the video was still on YouTube.

TheBlaze recently detailed Tucker Carlson's claims in his most recent Twitter video concerning the apparent societal effort to normalize child sexualization.

"One by one, with increasing speed, our old taboos have been struck down. Those that remain have lost their moral force. Stealing, flaunting your wealth, striking women, smoking marijuana on the street, shameless public hypocrisy, taking other people's money for not working — all of these things" were previously viewed as "unacceptable in America," Carlson said. "Not anymore."

Carlson emphasized that child molestation is now "teetering on the edge of acceptability."

\u201cEp. 2 Cling to your taboos!\u201d
— Tucker Carlson (@Tucker Carlson) 1686261625

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'New Zealand's Strongest Man' enters women's powerlifting competition to protest its transgender policy, forcing organizers to change the rules overnight



A male weightlifter once dubbed "New Zealand's Strongest Man" applied last week to compete in a women's powerlifting competition. His intention was not to defeat women in the sport, but rather to discredit the notion that biological men don't have a physiological advantage over their female peers — an advantage which male transsexuals appear keen to simultaneously exploit and deny.

Global Powerlifting Committee New Zealand has since denied Dale Shepherd's application, adopting new rules over the weekend that will preclude him from taking the stage to make his point.

While Shepherd suggests the new rules are similarly "deficient," it appears that with his controversial application, he may have forced a shift in the right direction without having to break a sweat.

A weighty concern

Some middling male athletes have transitioned over to women's sports in recent years, ostensibly in hopes of leveraging their sex-specific biological advantages to displace female athletes, thereby securing prize money, sponsorships, and other spoils.

Perceiving this trend to be unfair and unsportsmanlike, a number of men in the world of weightlifting have taken action.

Dale Shepherd, 52, is one of a handful of men to protest gender identification policies and make a mockery of the trend of noncompetitive men seeking to try their odds against women.

The British rapper Nzube Olisaebuka Udezue, whose stage name is Zuby, did so in 2019.

The Times reported that Zuby, an Oxford graduate, beat the British women's deadlift record as well as the bench lift record, then joked that the stunt was "strong, stunning and brave."

Zuby said his protest "struck a nerve," demonstrating "the fallacies of the arguments on the other side."

"I have seen people saying there is no inherent biological strength difference between men and women. I posted it being a bit tongue-in-cheek, showing what I think is the obvious absurdity of their argument," said the British rapper.

\u201cI keep hearing about how biological men don't have any physical strength advantage over women in 2019...\n\nSo watch me DESTROY the British Women's deadlift record without trying.\n\nP.S. I identified as a woman whilst lifting the weight. Don't be a bigot. \ud83d\ude02\u201d
— ZUBY: (@ZUBY:) 1551178515

TheBlaze recently reported that Avi Silverberg, former head coach for Team Canada Powerlifting, temporarily identified as a female on March 25 and demolished the women's record set by a male transsexual, Ann Andres, at the the Heroes Classic Powerlifting Meet in Lethbridge, Alberta.

Silverberg exploited the same gender policy as Andres had, then tested the transsexual athlete's record with him watching. Not only did the male coach beat Andres' record, he cleared it by nearly 100 pounds. Andres had previously lifted 275 pounds. Silverberg casually pressed 370 pounds.

\u201cA male powerlifting coach self-identified as a woman and broke a women's benchpress record in protest of gender self-identification in sport.\n\nAvi Silverberg performed the defiant act while the current record holder, a transgender male, watched.\n\nREAD: https://t.co/MXiyiGMgWQ\u201d
— REDUXX (@REDUXX) 1680023763

The Independent Council on Women’s Sports told the feminist publication Reduxx, "What Avi so obviously points out is that policies allowing men access to women’s sports completely remove any integrity in women’s competitions."

Another Anglo nation, another lesson to be learned

Reduxx reported that Dale Shepherd has been lifting weights for over forty years. In his time competing against other men, he claimed roughly two dozen national records and held the "All Time Deadlift World Record" for nearly six years. In 2010, he won the title of "New Zealand's Strongest Man" and claimed four top spots at the 2022 Nationals.

Shepherd endeavored to mount a protest, entering to participate in the women's category for the June Global Powerlifting New Zealand Day of the Deadlifts competition.

"I identify as a woman for this contest," Shepherd declared on his entry form.

He told Reduxx, "It is important to me that both transgender athletes and biological women both have the ability to compete in sports.

"However, regardless of hormone treatment such as giving a biological male estrogen – the hormone primarily responsible for female characteristics – it does not totally negate all the years that male has had with higher testosterone levels resulting in greater bone density, tendon and muscle strength. As such biological women are at a significant disadvantage."

"To maintain equity and preserve women’s sports, transgenders and biological women must have their own separate classes or eventually all women’s sports will be overtaken by biological men who now identify as a woman," Shepherd added.

According to Reduxx, the women's rights group Save Women's Sports Australasia hyped Shepherd's protests with an April 14 tweet.

\u201cDale weighs 118kg and has held the title of New Zealand\u2019s strongest man for six years. Thanks to the @nzlabour govt, #SexSelfID comes into force in NZ on 15 June when Dale will be self-identifying as a woman in time for the Global Powerlifting Committee (GPC) 1/2\u201d
— Save Women\u2019s Sports Australasia (@Save Women\u2019s Sports Australasia) 1681439275

Exposing folly and forcing a change

After this tweet made its rounds, the Global Powerlifting Committee New Zealand reportedly grew wise to the scheme and launched a desperate campaign to block Shepherd's entry.
The GPCNZ updated its website and rules just after he submitted his application, but maintained that "it is necessary to ensure that transgendered athletes are not excluded from the opportunity to participate in sporting competition, and are celebrated in the spirit of competitiveness and inclusiveness."

Whereas the GPCNZ's rules archived before the last-minute changes deferred greatly to entrants' gender self-identification, the new rules specified that male transsexuals must have "declared that her gender identity is female. The declaration cannot be changed, for sporting purposes, for a minimum of four years."

Additionally, per the new rules, male transsexuals "must have undergone hormone treatment (if medically indicated) for at least 12 months prior to her first competition."

The rules specify further that "transgendered people who are not taking hormones ... will go under complete confidential review."

Stuff reported that GPCNZ spokesman and trustee Greg Turrell had spoken with Shepherd about his entry.

"I've clarified the rules with Dale. He is ineligible," said Turrell. "[But] there is provision for transgender women to compete in powerlifting as a whole."

While the GPCNZ's expedited adoption of the new criteria may make it harder for men to quickly make the crossover into women's powerlifting, those dead set on deadlifting among women may only need to avoid telegraphing their intentions as Shepherd had.

Turrell nevertheless admitted, "We need to balance the desire to be inclusive but protect the integrity of women's powerlifting."

Here is Shepherd crushing a 310 kg squat, a 207.5 kg bench press, and a 352.5 kg deadlift in 2017:

Dale Shepherd - NZs Heaviest Raw Deadlift & M2 IPL World Record U110kg Bench & Deadlift youtu.be

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Transgender ballerina who studied at Royal Academy of Dance goes viral for all the wrong reasons

Transgender ballerina who studied at Royal Academy of Dance goes viral for all the wrong reasons



A man who claims to be a transgender ballerina and who has trained at one of the most prestigious dance academies in the world went viral recently after videos of his performances failed to impress viewers.

Several years ago, a man known only as Sophia Rebecca became the first "transgender" dancer to be accepted into the Royal Academy of Dance, a London-based association internationally renowned for its classically trained ballerinas. Already in his mid-30s, Rebecca was much older than his fellow ballerinas, who sometimes retire by age 30 because of the significant toll ballet takes on a woman's body.

Earlier this week, Rebecca went viral on social media after several outlets shared a video of him dancing, though very few applauded his performance:

Twitter is ablaze with discussion over a male dancer who was admitted to the prestigious Royal Academy of Dance.

Sophia Rebecca, a former IT technician, was accepted into the Academy in 2017 as their first transgender dancer. pic.twitter.com/sfDPs9VheO
— REDUXX (@ReduxxMag) April 10, 2023

"I know I shouldn’t laugh but it’s like something out of a surreal comedy!" said one user in reply.

Another posted a humorous photo of an elephant wearing a tutu.

Yet another user with the handle @LunarLemonade posted a video of herself performing the same dance as Rebecca. A might be expected, the comparison does not favor Rebecca:

\u201c@ReduxxMag FYI I started the music at the exact same time, his timing is just that off.\u201d
— REDUXX (@REDUXX) 1681142017

Rebecca claimed he was always enthralled by dancers and "mesmerized by the costumes," but inner turmoil and latent "transphobia" initially prevented him from pursuing his dream of becoming a dancer. So instead, he drove race cars and studied to become an IT consultant in North Yorkshire in the U.K.

"I’m sure I’d be a much better dancer today had I been able to continue back then," Rebecca told MambaOnline in 2020, "but it doesn’t really matter now. I can’t change that. I am where I am now and I’m working as hard as I can do be the best dancer I can be."

In 2017, he passed the RAD intermediate foundation ballet exam with a merit and eventually began to gain national attention, not for his dancing skills but for his role as "a groundbreaker." When Rebecca was over 40, he was featured as one of four dancers in British Vogue's "Forces For Change" campaign.

Rebecca's influence as a "transgender dancer" even went global. In 2020, shortly before COVID lockdowns, he traveled to Missoula, Montana, for a Ballet Beyond Borders event. Among the group of dancers, Rebecca is easy to spot on stage. Not only is he the only ballerina wearing a bust-enhancing costume, but he awkwardly towers over the other ballerinas, who twirl about him on toe with grace and poise, while he often stands stiff and flat-footed.

Despite criticism for his lack of talent, Rebecca appears undeterred. "I get confronted by stereotypes all the time," he once told RAD, the institution that staked some of its credibility on him. "People have this image in their head if you say 'ballet.' They have a belief that there’s such thing as a ballet body or that it’s delicate and feminine. It can be – but it can also be powerful and strong."

He hopes that someday, a "transgender dancer" will be known as "a dancer who happens to be transgender."

"I’d rather my dancing spoke more for me than my identity as a trans woman," he said.

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Male powerlifting coach crushes female bench record previously set by male transsexual — just to prove a point



Ann Andres is a biological male who claims to be a woman. He has placed first in multiple women's weightlifting competitions in Canada and holds the record for women's bench in the province of Alberta. He has gone so far in recent months as to ridicule the real women who compete against him.

Team Canada's male powerlifting coach Avi Silverberg has evidently had enough of noncompetitive men migrating to women's sports and gender self-identification policies in powerlifting. Over the weekend, he temporarily identified as a transgender and demolished Andres' record.

What's the background?

Andres is technically Alberta's powerlift record holder for bench and deadlifts in the women's category.

According to Open Powerlifting, Andres' personal bests are 440.9 pounds for squat; 275.5 pounds for bench; and 545.6 pounds for deadlift.

The transsexual athlete has won eight out of the nine female competitions he has entered since 2019.

The Independent Council on Women’s Sports, an advocacy group seeking to protect women's sports from male infiltrators, indicated that outrage mounted after Andres added insult to injury, having denigrated his competitors and claiming women's bench is "so bad."

Andres said in a video posted to Instagram, "Why is women’s bench so bad? I mean, not compared to me, we all know that I’m a tranny freak so that doesn’t count. And no, we’re not talking about Mackenzie Lee, she’s got little T-rex arms and she’s like 400 pounds of chest muscle apparently."

"Standard bench in powerlifting competition for women, I literally don’t know why it’s so bad," Andres reiterated. "My son, he weighs 45 pounds. His max bench is like 33, I’m legit seeing some women in competition who are doing something like 50 pounds, and I just don’t understand it."

\u201c\ud83c\udfcb\ufe0fTrans identifying male, Anne Andres is Alberta Canada's women's powerlifting record holder in bench\n\ud83d\udea8competes next month in women's category at the 2023 CPU National Championships\n\n\ud83d\udea9Recognizes no understanding of upper body strength differences btw males & females\n\ud83e\uddf5\u201d
— ICONS Women (@ICONS Women) 1672814490

Beaten at his own game

Avi Silverberg serves as head coach for Team Canada Powerlifting, beginning in 2012. He has since coached over 4,500 attempts in international competitions.

On March 25, Silverberg decided to temporarily identify as a woman — not to remedy possible dysphoria but as a means of protest. The newly minted transgender then attended the Heroes Classic Powerlifting Meet in Lethbridge, Alberta.

The meet reportedly adhered to the Canadian Powerlifting Union's gender self-identification policy, announced earlier this year.

The policy states, "Individuals participating in development and recreational sport ... should be able to participate in the gender with which they identify and not be subject to requirements for disclosure of personal information beyond those required of cisgender athletes. Nor should there be any requirement for hormonal therapy or surgery."

"Hormone therapy should not be required for an individual to participate in high-performance sport," added the document. "Individuals should not be required to disclose their trans identity or history to the sport organization in order to participate in high-performance sport."

Silverberg exploited this gender policy as Andres had, then tested the transsexual athlete's record with him watching.

Not only did the male coach beat Andres' record, he cleared it by nearly 100 pounds. Andres had previously lifted 275 pounds. Silverberg casually pressed 370 pounds.

The Independent Council on Women’s Sports noted on Twitter that "Avi Silverberg just broke the Alberta WOMEN's bench press record in the 84+ kg category at the 'Heroes Classic.'"

ICONS told the feminist publication Reduxx, "What Avi so obviously points out is that policies allowing men access to women’s sports completely remove any integrity in women’s competitions."

"It doesn’t matter how Avi expresses himself or perceives himself. He clearly does not belong in women’s sport, and neither does any other male regardless of their motivation for wanting to participate," added the women's advocacy group.

\u201cA male powerlifting coach self-identified as a woman and broke a women's benchpress record in protest of gender self-identification in sport.\n\nAvi Silverberg performed the defiant act while the current record holder, a transgender male, watched.\n\nREAD: https://t.co/MXiyiGMgWQ\u201d
— REDUXX (@REDUXX) 1680023763

Canadian weightlifter and YouTuber Greg Doucette lauded Silverberg's weighty protest, stating, "How long before the powers that be suddenly wake up and smell the coffee and understand that if you're born a female, you're not going to be as powerful, as strong, as tall, as big ... as if you were born a male."

"To me, the answer is simple: We add a separate category, a new category, the trans category," said Doucette.

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